02/03/2026
Câest une des grandes leçons que jâai reçu de Manamour.
Chaque cheval prĂ©sente des asymĂ©tries naturelles innĂ©es ou acquises. Des Ă©tudes en biomĂ©canique Ă©quine montrent que mĂȘme les chevaux cliniquement sains prĂ©sentent :
- Des asymĂ©tries locomotrices lĂ©gĂšres, mĂȘme sans boiterie diagnostiquĂ©e.
- Des tensions myofasciales liées au travail (dressage, saut, endurance, loisir)
Une prise en charge corporelle rĂ©guliĂšre peut amĂ©liorer lâamplitude de mouvement, diminuer la sensibilitĂ© musculaire et optimiser la rĂ©cupĂ©ration.
Un cheval ne compense pas âpar hasardâ. Il sâadapte. Mais lâadaptation prolongĂ©e peut crĂ©er des surcharges sur certaines structures.
La vraie question nâest donc pas :
âMon cheval est-il parfait ?â
Mais plutĂŽt :
âEst-ce que je lâaide activement Ă rester fonctionnel et confortable dans son travail ?â
Observer, prĂ©venir, entretenir : câest soutenir la longĂ©vitĂ© sportive et le bien-ĂȘtre.
Parce que prendre soin avant lâapparition dâun problĂšme est toujours plus cohĂ©rent que dâattendre quâil sâinstalle. đŽ
đŹđ§
Itâs one of the biggest lesson than I learned from Manamour.
Every horse has natural asymmetries, whether innate or acquired. Studies in equine biomechanics show that even clinically healthy horses exhibit:
* Slight locomotor asymmetries, even without diagnosed lameness.
* Work-related myofascial tension (dressage, jumping, endurance, leisure)
Regular body care can improve range of motion, reduce muscle sensitivity and optimise recovery.
A horse does not compensate âby chanceâ. It adapts. But prolonged adaptation can create overload on certain structures.
So the real question is not:
âIs my horse perfect?â
But rather:
âAm I actively helping it to remain functional and comfortable in its work?â
Observe, prevent, maintain: this is how you support sporting longevity and well-being.
Because taking care before a problem arises is always more sensible than waiting for it to develop. đŽ